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If your iPad is oriented the wrong way most of the time you pick it up, don’t worry because Apple is aware of your First World Problem and has a patented solution involving using your face to orient the device properly.

All iPads have always automatically rotated their screen so that you can hold them in landscape or portrait, and such that you can hold them any way up. However, every iPad user has also had the experience of having to physically rotate the device in order to get it to check again after it’s turned the wrong way.

According to Apple’s US Patent No. 20200104033, titled “Using Face Detection to Update User Interface Orientation”, device orientation that the content is presented is usually determined using inertial sensors like accelerometers. These sensors determine the orientation of the device relative to gravity, but sometimes they can be thrown off like when your iPad is laid flat on a table.

“When lying flat, even though the sensors may be accurately aware of the position of the device, the orientation relative to the user may be unknown,” Apple explains. In that case, you must physically rotate the tablet which prompts iOS to poll the motion sensors and check the orientation again.

From patent abstract:

There are, however, often situations in which these sensors cannot accurately or confidently determine the orientation of the device relative to gravity and the device will not change or update the orientation of the content to the proper orientation for the user or will update the orientation incorrectly.

Apple’s proposed solution calls for using Face ID and the TrueDepth camera to calculate which way around the user’s face is in relation to the device. “So it wouldn’t have to actually recognize us for authentication, it would simply see which way we must be looking at the device and alter what it shows to match,” explains AppleInsider.

“[Orientation] data obtained from a face detection process is used to determine or update the orientation of an application user interface (e.g., text and/or content) being displayed on a display of a device,” says the patent.

To be clear, the proposed solution doesn’t appear to require a full Face ID scan.